Baberick v. Abington Township

3 Pa. D. & C.2d 268, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 134
CourtPennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County
DecidedJuly 7, 1954
Docketno. 60
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Pa. D. & C.2d 268 (Baberick v. Abington Township) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Pennsylvania Court of Common Pleas, Montgomery County primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Baberick v. Abington Township, 3 Pa. D. & C.2d 268, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 134 (Pa. Super. Ct. 1954).

Opinion

Corson, J.,

On April 10, 1951, plaintiffs filed a petition for a declaratory judgment under the provisions of the Uniform Declaratory Judgment Act of June 18, 1923, P. L. 840, as supplemented by the Act of May 22, 1935, P. L. 228, and the Act of May 26,1943, P. L. 645,12 PS §§831 et seq.

On May 1, 1951, an answer on the merits was filed by defendant township.

On November 13 and 14, 1951, 239 pages of testimony were taken. At that time, as appears on page 238 of the testimony, it was stated that briefs would be filed and a time fixed for oral argument. It does not appear on the notes of testimony as to what date they were filed.

[270]*270On June 25, 1952, a letter was received by the trial judge stating that plaintiffs’ brief was being prepared and that they would present it to me sometime after July 5, 1952.

On March 9, 1953, the trial judge, after directing his secretary to call counsel for plaintiffs about the brief, received a letter dated March 9, 1953, stating that counsel for plaintiffs wished to file briefs in support of the petition and asked for further time.

Sometime later the brief was filed, although it does not appear from looking at the brief exactly when such filing took place. Apparently the delay in filing the brief was caused by the rather serious illness of Mr. Butterworth.

Counsel for defendants then asked for time to file defendants’ brief as he stated he had forgotten entirely about the case during the delay in the filing of plaintiffs’ brief. However, this delay continued for such a long period of time that in May of this year the trial judge who heard the testimony directed that oral argument be heard on Tuesday, June 15, 1954, and that if defendants’ brief was not forthcoming at the time of argument, the case would be decided without it. While this was referred to as a reargument, it was actually the only oral argument held in the case, as already noted.

While defendants first raised the question of the propriety of a declaratory judgment, upon the theory that the questions here raised could be raised in attacking the liens as filed, and cite the supplemental Act of 1943, supra, which provides, “Where, however, a statute provides a special form of remedy for a specific type of case, that statutory remedy must be followed; . . .”, and the case of Fahey Estate, 356 Pa. 535 (1947), yet since defendants answered upon the merits and did not file an answer raising questions of law, as provided in the supplemental Act of 1935, [271]*271supra, sec. 5, we feel that a declaratory judgment must be rendered.

It would appear that in 1928 Abington Township, which is a first class township, passed an ordinance with a more or less comprehensive plan of sewers for the entire township. This plan involves gravity flow sewage disposal in the three different watersheds of the township. These are referred to as the Tacony, Pennypaek, and Wissahickon watersheds. Various methods of carrying this plan into effect were suggested and experimented with, such as sewer authorities, electoral and councilmanic borrowing, etc. Admittedly the population of Abington Township has increased so rapidly that it has been impossible for the township to keep pace so far as the construction of sewers is concerned, with such large and sudden increase.

As the assessed valuation in the township increased, the borrowing power, either through councilmanic or electoral loans was increased and the construction of sewers and sewage disposal equipment and plant has increased through the years. The cost of the expensive disposal plants and large trunk sewers has been paid out of general township loans or at least moneys received from general taxation. On the so-called feeder lines the township has used the so-called front-foot rule assessment against the owners of properties abutting upon, and benefited by such feeder lines.

These feeder lines have been constructed in some cases by the issuance of nondebt revenue bonds under which the bonds are paid off from the assessments and sewer rentals. The costs under the various contracts which specifically cover certain areas of the township, as shown by the plan attached to the petition, vary greatly as to the cost per foot in the sewer construction.

Plaintiffs live in the area sewered under contract no. 13. Thirteen in this case appears to have been unlucky [272]*272so far as plaintiffs are concerned because of the fact that front-foot assessments under this contract amounted, to over $11, while other contracts, both later and. earlier, were much less — in some cases so low as to be in the neighborhood of $3 per foot. Under such circumstances it is not to be wondered that the owners of properties in the geographical district covered by contract no. 13, feel that they have been most unfairly treated.

• The question to be decided, however, is not whether they have been unfairly assessed, but whether they have been illegally assessed. Counsel argues that the township should have fixed a certain arbitrary front foot charge for feeder line sewer construction in the entire township and that any difference between the cost of any line and the actual higher cost of construction should be paid by the township from general taxation.

We agree with counsel for defendants, however, that such assessment by defendants would have been not only impractical but illegal. Where nondebt revenue bonds are issued, the assessments and rentals must be sufficient to take care of the repayment of such bonds. It would seem also that if the cost of construction amounted to less than the arbitrary charge fixed by the township, the property owner could, and would, most seriously object to paying an assessment-higher than the actual cost. The only happy property owners in such case would be those who obtained their sewers at less,than the cost of construction.

Petitioning plaintiffs, in their most able and comprehensive brief, raise two questions.

The first question is that since the township did not divide the township into sewer districts, that the township is required to treat the entire township as one district in which assessments shall be equal. We shall discuss this contention before taking up the remaining two.

[273]*273It is admitted that the township, in 1928, when the so-called Abington Hospital sewer line was constructed, did establish a separate sewer district known as the Baeder Creek district. It is also admitted in defendants’ answer that on May 2, 1945, defendants prepared and filed a comprehensive plan for a sanitary sewer system, revised as of September 13, 1945. It is obvious that defendant township at that time could not possibly have paid for, or contracted for, the construction of all of these proposed sewers under one contract.

Section 2407 of the First Class Township Code, of June 24, 1931, P. L. 1206, provides, inter alia, that “the commissioners of such township may constitute the territory accommodated into a sewer district or divide it into several sewer districts.” (Italics supplied).

The use of the word “may” would seem to indicate that the creation of such sewer districts was not a necessary requirement under the township code.

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Related

Fahey Estate
52 A.2d 580 (Supreme Court of Pennsylvania, 1947)

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Bluebook (online)
3 Pa. D. & C.2d 268, 1954 Pa. Dist. & Cnty. Dec. LEXIS 134, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baberick-v-abington-township-pactcomplmontgo-1954.